Reed Smith Newsletters

Welcome to our monthly newsletter, with a summary of the latest news and developments in UK employment law.

The new TUPE rules applying to transfers from 1 July 2024 are now live, but it is otherwise a quiet month on the legislative front due to the UK General Election on 4 July 2024. Our July edition focuses on some interesting case law, including the scope of a settlement agreement waiver, and pooling and alternative roles in a redundancy situation.

Case law updates

Contractual benefits: An employer was not entitled to remove life-long travel benefits provided by a third party in circumstances where there was a right to retain the benefit post-termination if the employees were made redundant with more than five years’ service. The claimants met these criteria, and it was established that the terms had been incorporated into the employees’ contracts of employment and that the contractual position had not been changed by the third-party provider having given notice to the employer that benefits would stop on termination for anyone employed after 1996 (which included all the claimants). (Adekoya and others v. Heathrow Express Operating Company Ltd)

Employment tribunals – disclosure: In a claim for unfair dismissal, sex and age discrimination arising from a redundancy exercise, the Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) has upheld an employment tribunal (ET) case management decision to require specific disclosure of the employer’s internal documentation containing financial information. The respondent had provided a redacted copy, having first deleted details about cost savings and employee costs, but the redacted information was deemed relevant to the issues for determination (specifically regarding the reason for dismissal and the choice and application of selection criteria) and disclosure of that information was both necessary and proportionate in the circumstances. (Virgin Atlantic Airways v. Loverseed and others)

Fixed-term contracts: The EAT has upheld an ET’s decision that it was objectively justifiable to retain an employee – a locum doctor – on a fixed-term contract. The claimant had been engaged on a series of successive fixed-term contracts, which would ordinarily mean she would be deemed a permanent employee, but the objective justification for retaining her on a fixed-term basis was made out in the circumstances. Employers using successive fixed-term contracts should remember that permanency becomes the default after four years and they should consider very carefully their rationale for continuing with another fixed-term arrangement. (Lobo v. University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust)